So, you just heard the latest stupid thing some celebrity said. It's astonishingly and hilariously stupid; in fact, every time you hear it, it gets funnier and funnier. Actually, after a while, it seems to have its own peculiar rhythm. All you need to do is loop it a few times, set it to a drumbeat, and add a couple of instruments, possibly Auto-Tune it... tada! It's a new song! Make a simple video for it, slap it on YouTube, and you're good to go!

Note that the statement does not have to be stupid. It could have odd diction, or idiosyncratic pronunciation, or something else that made it the grist in the mill of Memetic Mutation. Whatever it was, it's got a nice techno beat now. Real Life examples may be Auto-Tuned to make it even more danceable. To make things even easier, there are now apps for Android and iOS that would automatically do that for you!

On that topic, it seems that there was a trend to take a random commercial or sets of commercials for a product and make one of these, set to random music from Touhou and beatmania's Red Zone. The notorious Ran Ran Ruu appears to be a case of this.

Kaiba, meanwhile, has an practically an entire subgenre consisting of his use of Enemy Controller, and how easily it can be warped and put to music. To wit, here's an example of one. vanilla.ice, of Vaguely Recalling JoJo fame, released a music video based on the Enemy Controller meme starring Yoshikage Kira.

Don't call this Sayonara, Zetsubou-Senseiremix normal! Normal is never meant in a good way! (I know, you were probably expecting me to put "This remix has left me in despair" but people write that so much I thought it'd be nice to do something different.)

Among the new songs written for Monty Python's farewell performance was the "Nudge Rap/Theme From Blackmail", which doubled as a SSDM of their "Nudge Nudge" skit and a segue into their "Blackmail" skit.

Code MENT got one named after Lelouch's famous "YING!". The creator of the song, Illunex, also made one for Purpleeye's Abrigdement of One Piece.

From Yu-Gi-Oh! The Abridged Series, we get "Would You Like This Baby?". While mostly original, it does contain a clip of Lanipator saying "Hi, I'm Lanipator" from a video Lani had uploaded four years previously.

Hot Rod has a scene where two characters start repeatedly yelling "cool beans!" at each other in various ridiculous ways, then suddenly a hip-hop beat starts backing it up. Yes, this happens in the film itself. Looks like they decided to be one step ahead of the internet.

A variation of this can be seen in this music video based on a couple of lines from Silence of the Lambs. Note that while it is mostly footage from the movie, the quotes themselves only make up the chorus.

Rare in-media example: Planes, Trains and Automobiles used one of these as background music/credits music, consisting of Neil's "You're messing with the wrong guy!" and Del's "Del Griffith," "Hooo-ey," and "It's over, we can laugh about it now" set to a DJish remix completely with Record Needle Scratches.

Featured in the Christian Slater movie Pump Up the Volume, where students remix an interview between the anonymous pirate DJ "Happy Harry Hard-On" and Mr Deaver, guidance councillor. David Deaver speaking ♫.

The theme song from Mortal Kombat could be seen as an official example, since practically every vocal (except the Title Scream) is taken from the announcer of the first game. It's still awesome, though.

If you want to try and turn (your resignation from politics) into some kind of anti-war protest, expect to hear your little "Mountain of conflict" soundbite everywhere, from ringtones to a dance-mix on YouTube.

Another official example would be "Brain Dance" by Martini Ranch, which extensively samples dialogue from BrainDead and is the end credits song for the movie itself.

An official one was made to promote Full Metal Jacket. It reached #2 in the UK charts.

Batman does one in-universe at the Penguin's mayoral campaign rally in Batman Returns, complete with D.J. Scratch.

Joel Edinberg's "Roe Deer", based around dialogue from independent horror movie TEN. The remix was actually made by the film's sound recordist while the film was still in production, as a morale-boosting surprise for the cast and crew. Though the song isn't heard anywhere in the film itself, it appears as a "bonus track" on the official soundtrack album.

Skinny Puppy's "Sleeping Beast" mixes up samples from Dr. Helen Caldicott's nuclear war documentary If You Love This Planet:

There'll be-There'll be millions of corpses (4x). There'll be nobody (2x). The art, the literature? Everything will be gone (2x).

Piero Montanari made an early example of this trope in 1993 with his "Totò Rap", used in the ending credits of a broadcast about famous Italian comedian and poet Totò. Montanari used several samples from Totò's films set to a simple but enjoyable beat.

Dave Bowman's "By god, it's full of stars" monologue from 2001: A Space Odyssey was SSDM'ed by Solarstone in the intro and title track of their Rain Stars Eternal album.

Two weeks later, he made the same statement, then reiterated his statement in rhythm, to make the Reverse Psychology even more obvious.

RNC chairman Michael Steele accepted when Stephen challenged him to a rap battle, but he never showed up. So Stephen just had to do it for him.

Flight of the Conchords actually has at least one in series example: when someone at a night club comments on the lack of women with "There's too many dicks on the dance floor", we're treated to a techno Group Song composed mostly of repeating said line.

Parodied on Law & Order: Criminal Intent, in the "WeepingWillow17" episode, itself a parody of lonelygirl15. When Megan Wheeler posts a plea to the (apparent) kidnappers of the titular Willow, their response inexplicably starts off with a dance mix. Along with the general Shown Their Work in that episode, the writers probably just wanted to squeeze one more in.

Also parodied in Fun with Dick and Jane. After our hero fights Lawrence Dobson to get to a job interview, both men find a line of dozens. Just before they go out for a drink, one of the executives calls Dick into his office. No, not to give him a job, but to call other execs in and show everyone the SSDM based on Dick's statements after his boss crashed the company he used to work for and left him holding the bag.

"God Warrior" by Combichrist takes clips from the infamous episode of "Trading Spouses" regarding the ending freak out by the so called God Warrior. The music however is much darker and more aggressive then most techno or EBM (which is understandable considering that it's aggrotech) and focuses on the horrible idiocy and offensiveness of this woman.

Fictional Example. In one of the televised versions of Ruth Rendell's Inspector Wexford novels; Wexford discovers a body at a music festival and has to make an announcement to the crowd asking them to stay until interviewed by the police. The headline act later remixes Wexford's announcement into a dance mix and posts it to him as a ghoulish practical joke.

In an extremely rare live example, Stephen Fry, the host of Quite Interesting, or QI, a panel quiz show, flubs the line "They say of the Acropolis where the Parthenon is ...". The other guests proceed to rib him mercilessly for the next 3-4 minutes, even coming up with a Stupid Statement Dance Mix within 30 seconds of Stephen's flubbing the line.

And when, discussing a formula for the number of times you can fold a sheet of paper, he explained in all seriousness that "what you need is length and thickness," the entire panel warned him that this would be a dance mix tomorrow.

Ryan Roe: So here’s how you make a DVD bonus feature: 1. Take a freeze frame of Michael Jackson and a photo of Oscar the Grouch. 2. Edit Michael Jackson’s few lines of dialogue to make it sound like a song about the joys of imagination. 3. Throw some fuzzy pink confetti animation in the background. 4. EVERYBODY DANCE

The first episode of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt explains the central conceit of the show via news broadcast that segues into a dance remix of said broadcast... which is then used as the show's Theme Tune for future episodes.

In the Finnish show, Ennätystehdas, Olli Hokkanen tried to get a national record of drinking Coca-Cola. He failed his attempt and complained that the drink was "too acidic" for him. His exact phrasing was "Nyt ei pysty. Liian hapokasta." This became a meme in Finland, and one guy then made this.

The Ur-Example is the composition "It's Gonna Rain" by Steve Reich, where he took part of a speech from an over-the-top street preacher and looped it...in 1965. Many of the early pioneers in the techno/trance/house genre cite Steve Reich and specifically this piece as an inspiration.

Another early example was Scott Johnson's "John Somebody" which came out in the late 70s. It sampled random bits of phone conversations with friends and recordings of laughter and played guitar riffs to accompany them. Though his work wasn't necessarily to mock them, but to bring attention to the musical quality of the human voice.

An early example comes from lead singer David Byrne and frequent producer/collaborator Brian Eno: The 1981 album My Life in the Bush of Ghosts is made up of songs based around samples from interviews, field recordings, or TV broadcasts. The samples weren't as 'chopped and screwed' as many of these other examples, and the focus was on sampling-as-an-instrument instead of making fun of celebrities, but the essentials are there: voice samples, played around with and used as if a vocal track, and set to a backing beat.

Also running for President in 1984 was Rev. Jesse Jackson, whose iconic address to the Democratic Convention and one of his "Free South Africa" speeches were sampled by Stetsasonic for 1987's A.F.R.I.C.A.

Prince had a #1 hit single in 1989 with "Batdance". The song is literally two Stupid Statement Dance Mixes mashed together: a maniacal dance beat for Batman and the Joker, with a slinky funk number for Vicki Vale. Each section also got their own 12" remix.

Here's a transcript of the early part of the song, just to give you a taste of how schizoid it really is: "[guitar riff] 'Oh, I got a live one here! Heh-heh-heh-heh-heh-heh-hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo!' [marimba] [guitar riff] 'GET THE FUNK UP!' 'BATMAN!' 'GET THE FUNK UP!' 'BATMAN!' 'GET THE FUNK UP!' 'Go-Go-Go with a smile! [percussive beat] 'BAT-DANCE!' 'Do it!' [saxophone riff]..."

There's a weird one on the B side of the original "Like a Prayer". Madonna recites the Act of Contrition, a prayer for forgiveness — and immediately loses her temper.

One of the earliest clear examples (predating YouTube by a good ten years) has to be It's a Skull (AKA Valhalla, in the style of... a crap dance mix), which featured vocals made entirely from voice samples taken from Valhalla and the Lord of Infinity, an adventure game for the Amiga, created as an entry to Amiga Power's regular "In the style of..." competition, and later published on the coverdisk a few issues later.

In a very different example we have Tim Lambesis of As I Lay Dying's side project Austrian Death Machine. The concept is to make brutal, hardcore, thrash/metalcore songs out of Arnie quotes. It even has Chad Ackerman of Destroy the Runner performing Arnie impressions.

80s mutant disco group Was (Not Was) released a dance mix of the first George Bush's "read my lips" speech under the name A Thousand Points of Night.

Negativland's U2 single set some bootlegged outtakes of a foul-mouthed Casey Kasem to a cheesy instrumental version of U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For." Naturally the official release got sued out of existence.

Negativland has done a number of these over the years. The best known and most controversial is probably "Christianity Is Stupid" in which a recording of Rev. Estus Pirkle, speaking in a self-produced 1971 film about what life under Godless communism would be like, is taken out of context and re-edited.

Marcus Kinchin's "Dub of Doom" remix of The Nightcrawlers' "Push The Feeling On" was far more popular than the original song, to the extent that all subsequent remixes were based on his.

"Call My Name", an early self-released song by The Spinto Band, did this with The Childlike Empress from the film version of The NeverEnding Story ("Why don't you do what you dream, Bastian? Call my name! Call my name!").

When Paris Hilton's pop album came out, Danger Mouse and Banksy made 500 CDs with a SSDM of all the stupid things Paris has ever said and distributed them randomly in record shops in the UK amongst the real albums.

They Might Be Giants' "P.S.O.K." - though there is a brief chorus of sorts sung by John Flansburgh, most of the vocals are sampled stage banter from Kiss's Paul Stanley, sourced from a bootleg collection of banter entitled People, Let Me Get This Off My Chest. It mainly demonstrates how Stanley keeps using variations on the same lines show after show:

''We haven't played this one but once all this whole tour We haven't played this one in a long time I don't think we've played this one in a long time We haven't played this one in a long time

Handsome Boy Modeling School's So...How's Your Girl? includes two short SSDMs of an episode of the sitcom Get A Life, which the group got their name from: "Look At This Face (Oh My God, They're Gorgeous!)" and "Modeling Sucks".

Covenant's "Painamplifier"("Put your life in a pain-a pain-a pain-a pain amplifier") and "Shelter"("The atom bomb explodes again!"... :BAAAOOOM: :BAAAOOOM: :BAAAOOOM: for the rest of the song)

Paul Hardcastle's lone 1985 hit"19" sampled a documentary about The Vietnam War, the song's name coming from one sample which stated that the average Vietnam soldier was 19 years old at the timenote It was later re-estimated to be 23, but most would agree that "t-t-t-t-t-twenty three" isn't as catchy.. Unlike most examples of this trope, it's quite horrifying.

When the laugh track starts, then the fun starts! Then the fun starts. Then the fun starts. Then the fun starts...

Trip Theory's "Time's Up" SSDM's the lyric "Think of how many week shows you slept through? Time's up, sorry I kept you." from Eric B. & Rakim's "I Know You Got Soul". "It Can Be Done (But Only I Can Do It)" does likewise with a different lyric from the same song. Much earlier, "IKYGS" was the source of the title lyric in M/A/R/R/S' "Pump Up the Volume".

Another proto-internet example is The Orb's 1991 hit "Little Fluffy Clouds," an ambient track which remixed samples of an interview with singer Rickie Lee Jones, loopy from a head cold, describing her childhood in Arizona.

News and Current Affairs

In 1989 Belgian newbeat group Brussels Sound Revolution sampled statements of Belgian politician Paul Vanden Boeynants after he had been kidnapped into the song "Qui?". They even made a music video of it, where someone in a bandaged head with sunglasses imitates him, still recognizable due to his iconic pipe.

This is Evolution Control Committee's entire schtick, though their most famous song, "Rocked by Rape" spliced together a number of Dan Rather clips to skewer him rather effectively. CBS was not amused, but their attempts at squashing the song backfired spectacularly.

Aussies would remember "Pauline Pantsdown", based on remixing words spoken by politician Pauline Hanson from about ten years ago. It wasn't techno but it actually got airtime and reached #5 on the Triple J Hottest 100.

GWB's many statements over those eight long painful years just begged to be SSDM'd. Even Neil Young got in on it. In his 2006 release Living With War, the song "Let's Impeach the President"note Subtlety has never been Mr. Young's strong point. includes a coda in which a 100-voice chorus shouts "FLIP!.... FLOP!" over soundbites of Shrub saying first one thing, then another, about the 9-11 attacks, Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein.

And the remix of the King of Spain chewing Chavez out with approximately, "Why don't you shut up?"

It doesn't get any more stupid than this, when a reporter says, "He climbed to the top of Mount Everest, but... he's gay. Excuse me, he's blind." The short version, with just the stupid statement, can be found here or here and here and here and the remix can be found here and mostly here. It never ceases to be hilarious and painful.

The "Chk-Chk Boom!" girl, a Kings Cross resident who gave a fabricated eyewitness account of a public shooting to A Current Affair complete with the aforementioned sound effect, has been turned into several dance mixes.

While he was watching Muammar Gaddafi's latest rant promising to destroy the pro-democratic uprising against him, Israeli musician Noy Alooshe thought that the dictator's crazy gesticulations and speech patterns reminded him of a trance party. The result: Zenga Zenga, the same speech autotuned to Pitbull's "Hey Baby." It's become popular among members of the Libyan opposition.

Skinny Puppy's "Far Too Frail", from the same Remission EP/album as the aforementioned "Sleeping Beast", remixes a clip from Ronald Reagan's 1984 speech about pornography upon signing the Child Protection Act, alongside the sample "They're alive, they're human beings!" from Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt.

Pro Wrestling

When Candice MichelleTook a Level in Badass in 2007, challenging Melina for the Women's Championship, WWE composer Jim Johnston took her previous entrance theme "What Love Is" (a fairly straightforward R&B number with a rap breakdown toward the end) and remixed it into a new version that started out like the old one and sounded like it for about four seconds, but then veered off into wacko repetition mode and stayed like that for the rest of the song; with its mind-numbing techno beat and ad nauseam repetitions of "Move your body", "Raise your hands up", and "All eyes on muh-muh-muh-muh-muh-me!", it's easy to interpret this as a parody of Stupid Statement Dance Mixes...but no, it's dead serious. (You can hear the "What Love Is" remix on the 2008 album WWE The Music Volume 8.)

The immortal and legendary Karl Pilkington gave us "I Could Eat a Knob at Night" from the first series of The Ricky Gervais Show podcast. Example.

Back in 2000, The Jim Rome Show received a tape of a remix of frequent caller John in C-Town set to music, prominently featuring the phrase "Lunch with the monkey". note "Monkey" is show slang for a radio station's program director, used derogatorily toward a PD who would not air the complete show live, or would threaten to time-shift the show. John in C-Town had, in fact, had lunch with the Cleveland affiliate's PD regarding the station's handling of the show.

The end of Big Finish Doctor Who's "The Holy Terror" contains a crowd chant from the story ("ALL HAIL FROBISHER, ALL HAIL THE BIG TALKING BIRD') set to a driving Eurotechno beat as an Easter Egg.

An artist called DruBoogie has been featured on Opie And Anthony, remixing both clips from the show and from popular internet videos.

Another remix played on the show was a remix of Bob Kelly breaking his knee ("I broke my knee, man!")

The final episode of the 2015 Vote Now Show ended with a Stupid Statement Dance Mix of all the "best" quotes from the election campaign.

Video Games

StarCraft stands out for having a official Stupid Statement Dance Mix, Radio Free Zerg featuring the Overmind

Zero Wing: Ye olde classic All Your Base. note Song: "Invasion of the Gabber Robots (All Your Base)" by The Laziest Men on Mars, which in turn contains "lyrics" from the PAL MegaDrive release of arcade shooter Or its derivatives, like All Your Snakes.

LEGO The Lord of the Rings and LEGO Dimensions have an item you can unlock that plays a techno remix of various lines from the game. It also acts as a disco ball and (in the former game) lights up dark caves. And makes nearby figures rock out.

There is also a remix of Marisa Stole the Precious Thing comprised entirely of sounds heard at JR East train stations in Japan, mostly prerecorded messages like "the doors are now closing" and various station announcements.

And one set to a product recall announcement, of all things. Panasonic wasn't very good at making sure their kerosene heaters didn't cause carbon monoxide poisoning back in the 80s.

Valve seems to have taken them YTPMVs to heart, as the snippet of the Team Fortress 2 theme at the end of "Meet the Spy" is overlaid with sounds of the Spy stabbing the Soldier and Heavy, complete with the victims' cries. Of course the fandom is leaping onto the footage with abandon, and we should expect to see every "standard SSDM" using it out by the next month latest.

Puzzlingly, the end-credits music for Sanitarium is a remix of various lines from the game. It may not be one statement over and over, but it's close enough to this trope to be amusingly incongruous with the rest of the game.

There are several remixes of a Let's Play for Super Kaizo World when the LPer, Proton Jon is spin-jumping on a Pokey, which is moving at an excruciatingly slow pace (rather bad, since he only has 100 seconds to complete the course). His cries of "MOVE FASTER POKEY!" have apparently undergone Memetic Mutation. "Groove faster Pokey!"

Leading Cyber from beatmania IIDX and certain Dance Dance Revolution installments invokes this during the break, the hardest part of the song: "Digi-digital storm going to rock your brain, Digi-digital storm going to rock your brain, Digi-digital storm, Digi-digital storm, Digi-digi-digi-digi-didididididi". The sample previously appeared in the 1996 hard trance track "Typhiko" by Welcome, which also did this with "Rock your body to the beat, come on now".

The folks at the mrbrown show took several soundbites from the National Day address, made by the Prime Minister of Singapore Lee Hsien Loong, and then remixed them to the rhythm of "My Humps" by the Black-Eyed peas. This one needs a bit of context first: the Prime Minister had made a jarring malapropism when he addressed an earlier podcast by the mrbrown show, in which an aspiring politician can't get his order of noodles, because the hawker has surveillance footage proof that he did not order what he had claimed to. This in itself was referencing an incident that happened during the 2006 General Elections in Singapore. The Prime Minister countered this by saying "I will say, mee siam mai hum", which means "rice vermecilli without cockles". However, the dish of mee siam is never eaten with cockles anyway, which demonstrated how out of touch the Prime Minister, and his scriptwriters, were with the people. It can be argued that he was trying to say hiam, or "chillies/spice", but who eats non-spicy mee siam anyway? At any rate, you can check it out here.

Wolfgang, Pass auf! here. The statement, from a video called Reifenverlust, "loss of a tire," quickly became a meme in the German-speaking world. (The title, in case you were wondering, means "Wolfgang, look out!" or "Wolfgang, heads up!")

The Game Grumps have inspired tons of these, to the point that one fan has compiled six unofficial albums, with 30 or more songs each, and that's barely scratching the surface.

There have even been a couple in the show itself, made by resident video editor Barry. Most notably, in a playthrough of Mario Party, Jon requested that Barry remix Arin sobbing (as Princess Peach) "Iwonttakeyourjewelsanymorewhatthefuckyoucanhavethemallbackifyouwant!" The result was glorious.

JonTron himself has done a couple in his some of the Disney Bootlegs episode of his own show. The first is a remix of himself uttering a Big "OMG!" set to the tune of Circle of Life, in reaction to Simba hanging himself in the Game Over screen of one of the bootlegs. The other is a remix of one of Hitler's speeches to the tune of Hakuna Matata; the speech stays in German, but Jon provides fake subtitles for it.

YouTuber MaverickHunterZero75 played with this in his "Top 10 Least Favorite Boss Battles" countdown. While talking about the Komodo Brothers tank battle from Crash Bash, he lampshades that he could make a song from the constant "YOU FAIL!" line, and he did exactly that, creating a small remix of the line using the Gourmet Race theme from Kirby Superstar. See here.

MaverickHunterZero75: "Heck, you can make a song using every single time you hear that. And I did just that!"

The Bloodhound Gang did a variant on this with their song "Ralph Wiggum," which is a song made entirely out of quotes by, well, Ralph Wiggum from The Simpsons. "I'm a pop sensation," indeed. Though technically, one line was spoken to him, instead of by him.

There is not enough room on this page to list all the remixes of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, and we don't want to play favorites, but just Take Our Word for It that there a lot of them. It might be exaggerating to say every line from every episode has been incorporated into one somewhere, but only slightly.

One particularly noteworthy example is 'Avast Fluttershy's Ass' which, rather than reworking Fluttershy's lines into lyrics, reworks miniscule samples of them (and a few sound effects, such as her kicking a vase) into the melody. Also uses her "Flutterguy" voice to provide bass. It actually became so popular that it received multiple remixes and inspired several imitators.

The mane theme itself gets this treatment in the opening of Equestria Girls.

The Saddle Row Review has an in-universe example when Twilight and the others chant "sweep, sweep, sweep, sweep" to DJ Pon-3's upstairs techno beats while sweeping Rarity's new Manehattan boutique. Not surprisingly, the fandom were quick to re-mix it.

Somebody summoned a Mr. Meeseeks and asked if he could inspire a wonderfully hilarious Ear Worm in their honor. Mr. Meeseeks' reply: "CAAAAAAAN DO!" This one has an impressive amount of effort put into it compared to many other SSDMs, including real instrumentation and even a key change partway through.

Not exactly an example of this trope as it isn't a celebrity or movie quote, but instead about how astronomer Patrick Mooreplays the xylophone (or least he did till arthritis stopped him). "Par-pa-pa-pa-pa-Patrick!"

This Youtube channel is entirely based on pasting the "I'm Black Y'all" rap from the hip-hop mockumentary CB 4 over various VGM songs. With hilarious results, of course.

Stark Effect's Mic In-Track, an EP of techno songs based around anonymous internet-users' home recordings, which were unwittingly shared on peer-to-peer file-sharing programs due to being left in the same folder as their shared music. "Bunny Rabbits Satan Cheese And Milk" and "Eeples And Beeneenees" best fit the stupid statement dance mix formula, though "I Miss You" is actually downright sad.

Fall on Your Sword have produced a few, most notably Shatner on the Mount, though to be fair, a full album of Stupid Statement Dance Mixes could probably be made from but a fraction of Shatner's ramblings.

Ashens later reviewed a handheld game called Retieval Mankind's Batman for his popular Popstation Watch videos. He made a passing joke about how the tat looked like a fat Batarang. Then, this video happened.

Ashens himself made one from an old clip from Columbo. He plays it anytime he needs to show off a device's audio quality instead of playing a licensed song and risking a takedown notice.

Politician Howard Dean's surprisingly enthusiastic speech after the 2004 Iowa Caucusus (he came in third, after investing very heavily in the state) spawned a number of dance remixes.

Believe it or not, these were made far before the internet. Take a look at Mozart's canon Leck Mich Im Arsch, a song where the only lyrics are a particularly amusing line from Götz von Berlichingen repeated over and over.

Ladies and Germs, behold the Farting Preacher Dance Remix. Clearly, we as a society have reached the pinnacle of something here, it's just hard to say what.

A genre of video from Japan called "gachimuchi" (a Japanese term for big, muscular men) involves making a Stupid Statement Dance Mixout of gay porn, mostly those involving adult film star Billy Herrington. The results are... weird.

"I am not an atomic playboy". Admiral William H.P. Blandy recited the phrase while making a speech regarding the underwater atomic bomb testing at Bikini Atoll in 1946. Then in the 90s, someone stumbled upon footage of the speech. The result was several stupid statement dance mixes centered around this one particular sentence.

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